The Wolfman is the can I own that I regret buying the most. I will sell it the day they take suppressors out of the NFA (if that ever happens). It's overly large in diameter and heavy. If you try to put it under a handguard, you can't mount things in the slots around it because there is interference. It doesn't sound any better than my Tirant 9M on any of my 9mm PCCs. On my Glocks, it's noticeably worse than the Tirant while completely dwarfing it in size and weight.
The novelty of the wipe wears off quickly. I used the one that came with the can and was "meh!" about it, so I never replaced it.
It has oddball threads (1.203-28) that limit mounting options if you ever want to run it on something else. No one uses that thread pattern except for DA. I highly recommend sticking to HUB (1.375-24) or Alpha (1.125-28) since there are far more options for these and who knows what is going to come out in the future in terms of mounts. If DA's next version has HUB or Alpha threads, it's unlikely new mounts would be offered for it (if not a DA mount).
That you can run it on 300 blk super and 5.56 is what initially interested me in the Wolfman since I wanted it for an SBR build that has multiples uppers. They initially said you needed to use the micro brake with it in order to do that. It took forever for them to release it though. I think that coincided with their supplier woes. Then when they saw other manufacturers offering cans that could also handle those cartridges without the brake, they backtracked on the requirement. So, some companies like Area419 didn't integrate a sacrificial baffle into their mount for the it. There's no way in hell I would run the Wolfman on a 300 blk with supers or on a 5.56 without the brake after all of the issues they've had with quality and warranty lately. I ended up running a JMAC X20 in it for a while, then switched to Plan B with Rearden brakes. I am heavily invested the the Hellfire mounts, so that was expensive and annoying!
I just got a TBAC Fly 45 and that can does everything the Wolfman does in a smaller, lighter package with higher caliber ratings. It's rated for full auto 9mm, for 300 blk supers out of an 8" or longer barrel and you can even go up to 308 Win with a 16" barrel. All without needing a brake. It uses HUB threads, so there are tons of mounting options and new ones in the future will be supported. It's quieter on a 9mm in it's short configuration than the Fly 9 in the long configuration, according to TBAC's test video.